Webber seething as Vettel betrays Red Bull orders at Sepang


F1 News
Date: 24/March/2013

Mark Webber was left fuming after Red Bull team-mate and reigning champion Sebastian Vettel ignored team orders and snatched victory in the closing stages of Sunday’s Malaysian Grand Prix.

Webber had moved ahead of pole sitter Vettel during the opening round of pit stops, when drivers switched from intermediate to slick tyres on a drying track. 

Vettel then spent much of the race behind Webber, his frustration clear when he radioed to say “Mark is too slow. Get him out of the way”. Vettel was told to “be patient. Only half the race yet.”

Webber regained his pace after the next pit stop, while Vettel briefly dropped to third, between Mercedes drivers Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg.

The controversy occurred shortly after the fourth and final pit stops, when Vettel used DRS to pull a close move alongside Webber into turn one. The pair fought side-by-side through the following corners until the German squeezed ahead.

The problem? Red Bull, which had struggled with acute tyre wear in practice, had told its drivers to ‘hold position’ after the final pit stops. A coded radio message had also been issued, all of which prompted Webber to drop his guard.

Team Manager Christian Horner explained: “We let them race up to the last pit stop. Then we told the drivers to maintain position and look after the tyres. Sebastian took it into his own hands.”

Webber did his best to contain his anger during a tense podium ceremony, but the sense of betrayal was clear.

“After the last stop the team told me the race was over,” he said. “I want to race as well, but the team made a decision - look after the tyres, turn the engine down and get the car to the end. Seb made his own decisions today and will have protection and that’s the way it goes.”

Vettel, long perceived as enjoying favouritism at Red Bull, initially appeared unaware of the uproar he had caused.  “If there is something to say then we need to talk internally,” he commented during the podium ceremony.

But minutes later, perhaps after speaking to the team, Vettel offered an apology.

“I think I did a big mistake today. We should have stayed in the positions that we were. I didn’t ignore it on purpose but I messed up and obviously took the lead. I can see now he’s upset, but I want to be honest at least and stick to the truth and apologise. All I can say is that I didn’t do it deliberately. “

Asked how he could claim it wasn’t deliberate, an uncomfortable Vettel replied: “I’m the black sheep right now… The pass was deliberate, obviously. But I didn’t mean to ignore the strategy or the call. I made a mistake.

“If I had the chance to do it again, I would do it differently but I can’t change it now. Maybe in the future there’s a situation where I can, but I will try to explain that again to Mark and the whole team.”

Even Red Bull Advisor Dr Helmut Marko, a critic of Webber whenever the team-mates have clashed in the past, blamed the young German.

“We told the drivers to stay in position because we were worried about tyre wear. It got out of hand,” he said. “The team will have to a word because we have to control the drivers. It is not like Mercedes where there is a clear number one and number two…”

The last comment was a reference to the team orders also applied by Mercedes, which saw new superstar signing Lewis Hamilton limp home to his first rostrum for the team at the expense of Rosberg.

Rosberg repeatedly pleaded to be allowed to overtake Hamilton in the closing stages, only to be denied permission by Team Principal Ross Brawn, who explained that Hamilton had been asked to back off and save fuel.

To Hamilton’s credit, he was quick to recognise the sacrifice made by Rosberg and looked almost as uncomfortable as the Red Bull drivers on the podium.

“If I’m honest, Nico should be standing here. Generally he had better pace than me throughout the race. I was fuel-saving for a long time and unable to keep the pace. I can’t say it’s the best feeling, but the team did a great job and I’m proud to be up here for them.”

With Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso crashing out when his broken front wing - caused by contact with the back of Vettel at the start - jammed under the car, Vettel now leads the standings by nine points over Melbourne winner Kimi Raikkonen.

Round three will be held at Shanghai, China on April 14, before which Vettel and Red Bull will have a lot of bridge-building to do with Webber.

“There were a lot of things going through my mind in the last 15 laps of the grand prix, lots of different reasons, not just from today but also from the past,” said Webber. “We’ll see what happens. We’ve got three weeks before the next race.

“It’s very early days right now, it’s very raw, obviously, and we need to work out how the team goes best forwards from here.”

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